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#78 |
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Nov 2003
22·5·373 Posts |
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#79 | |
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Aug 2006
3·1,993 Posts |
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My apologies for not having the time to delve into this further at the moment. |
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#80 |
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Aug 2006
597910 Posts |
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#81 | |
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
2×3×13×83 Posts |
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Before resorting to PM or a meeting, a few questions/anecdotes come to mind. When (~1960) were you born/bred and where? When/how did you determine you were gay? Are you aware of the "60s revolution"? After I divorced in 1992 (and before internet porn:) I travelled to Amsterdam several times. I found the Dutch people I met to be liberal-minded, intelligent, humorous, fluent in English etc. : when I suggested to a Dutchman that this was a national trait, quite different from the average Brit, he assured me that I would find equally ignorant/bigoted people in the Netherlands if I strayed off the beaten tourist track. Where in the Netherlands did you find respite? Have you been to Brighton? I had a favourite porn shop in the red light district, where the proprietor would regularly give me a cup of coffee while I sought out a suitable "dirty" video. On leaving satisfied, I thanked him for the free coffee: "The video was free. That was the most expensive coffee you've ever had". I usually stayed at the Hotel Van der Velder on Damstraat. Delightful family ran/(run?) it. They must have sussed the (main) purpose of my visit, but noone mentioned it, and we enjoyed many an enjoyable breakfast conversation, notably the classical music they piped, another great feature of your adopted country. David on the train, |
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#82 | |
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May 2003
7·13·17 Posts |
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----------- CRGreathouse, To be honest, it hadn't occurred to me before your post that Silverman was being hyperbolic too. Perhaps because I just don't see a few percentage points difference in "high school drop out rates" creating a distinction between states being led by the educated and those not. (Nor, frankly, do I think such statistics fairly represent how educated people are with respect to social issues.) But thanks for helping me understand. |
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#83 |
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6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101×103 Posts
231328 Posts |
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#84 | |
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"Forget I exist"
Jul 2009
Dumbassville
203008 Posts |
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#85 | ||
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7×467 Posts |
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---- Quote:
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#86 | |
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May 2003
7·13·17 Posts |
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The highest state is Alaska, a red state. Depending on how one defines red vs. blue, the top ten are pretty equally split, perhaps even favoring red. The bottom few are all southern states, a significant majority of those being red. California is only 3 percentage points above those states. In other words: they are pretty evenly distibuted. But as I said, I don't know that this statistic measures social education. I imagine it is a complicated statistic, measuring, among other things: the effect of uneducated immigrants coming to the US, the effect of students in low population states choosing jobs not requiring education, etc... I imagine there may be a religious effect. Some religions encourage education while others don't. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religio...d_intelligence Last fiddled with by Zeta-Flux on 2010-12-03 at 01:29 |
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#87 | |||
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May 2003
7×13×17 Posts |
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There was one specific sentence that bothered a few people I know--about how Heavenly Father wouldn't give us temptations we cannot overcome. Pres. Packer chose to change the wording in the published version. So I would recommend that more than the actual video (which you can find at lds.org if you like). The published talk is found at: Pres. Packer's talk Quote:
Last fiddled with by Zeta-Flux on 2010-12-03 at 01:47 |
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#88 | |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
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The legislative margins in Florida and Illinois were just two votes in each case (i.e., changing two "nays" to "ayes" in each state would've ratified), and just one vote in Virginia. (In Virginia, oddly enough, not only a change of one "nay" to an "aye", but also either one additional "aye" or one additional "nay" with no other change would've led to ratification. In the last case, the additional "nay" (instead of the lone abstention) would've produced a tie that would've been broken in favor of ratification by the Lieutenant Governor presiding over the state senate, whereas the number of ayes by state senators was insufficient without the L.G.'s tie-breaking addition.) Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2010-12-03 at 23:54 |
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